NPR美国国家公共电台 NPR 2013-08-06
时间:2013-09-26 03:53:05
搜索关注在线英语听力室公众号:tingroom,领取免费英语资料大礼包。
(单词翻译)
Major League Baseball is suspending 13 players for using performance-enhancing drugs. Twelve of them have accepted their 50-game penalty. But New York Yankees Alex Rodriguez is getting a more than 200-game suspension that could take him out of play through the 2014 season. He says he's appealing. NPR's Mike Pesca has the latest.
Nelson Cruz, Jhonny Peralta, Everth Cabrera, Antonio Bastardo and a handful of players who are not on active Major League
rosters1 have all been suspended for 50 games. Cruz and Peralta, who played for teams in the playoff hunt, can return by the post season. Alex Rodriguez will reportedly appeal his suspension, which is for 211 games including all of next season. Rodriguez is, in fact, playing in his first game of the season after coming off the disabled list and will play during his appeal. Baseball
commissioner2 Bud Selig explained that Rodriguez’s longer sentence was for an attempt to cover up the
investigation3 that led to these suspensions. Mike Pesca, NPR News.
The State Department is keeping 19 overseas diplomatic posts closed for the rest of the week. NPR's Ari Shapiro reports this is on top of a global travel alert suggesting that al-Qaeda may be planning an attack on US interests abroad.
White House spokesman Jay Carney says the decision to keep these embassies closed a few extra days does not come from new intelligence, but rather a reassessment of the same intelligence that
initially4 led the US to close some embassies late last week, and Carney says the US is not certain about the intended targets.
“The threat is
emanating5 from and may be directed towards the Arabian Peninsula, but it is beyond that, potentially, and that is why we have taken some of the actions we've taken and we can't be more specific than that.”
He says the available information suggests that al-Qaeda may try to stage attacks between now and the end of August. Ari Shapiro, NPR News, the White House.
Emergency workers in Afghanistan and Pakistan are struggling to rescue and assist victims of flash floods. NPR's Sean Carberry reports that in eastern Afghanistan the death
toll6 has risen to more than 80, and many people remain unaccounted for.
Several days of heavy rain triggered flash floods in at least six different provinces in eastern Afghanistan. Officials say hundreds of houses have been washed away along with roads and agricultural land. The hardest-hit area is the Sorobi district of eastern Kabul province where dozens have died. Many of the bodies are being recovered miles downriver. Heavy deforestation and poor construction of houses in rural areas are
exacerbating7 the flood damage. Officials expect the death toll to climb as emergency responders struggle with poor
infrastructure8 and mountainous
terrain9 to make their way into remote villages. Sean Carberry, NPR News, Kabul.
Before the closing bell, Dow Jones Industrial Average down 46 points at 15,612, NASDAQ was up three at 3,693, and the S&P 500 off three points at 1,707. You’re listening to NPR News.
The global campaign to fight hunger has made a breakthrough of sorts. Scientists have produced their first lab-grown hamburger. It was sampled at a news conference today in London. NPR's Philip Reeves reports the
prospects10 for what this could mean for feeding the world were arguably more appetizing than the burger's actual taste.
The burger is intended as an
ethical11, environmentally friendly way to produce meat in the face of growing global demand. It's made from tiny strips of muscle grown from cow stem cells at an institute in the Netherlands. Scientists there say it currently takes 440,000 cows to make 175 million burgers. Yet it should eventually be possible to make the same amount with cells from one cow. A food scientist who is one of two people to taste the burger today says it's pretty similar to meat but not very juicy. It also is a lot more expensive. The burger cost more than 330,000 dollars to develop in a project bankrolled by Google co-founder Sergey Brin. Philip Reeves, NPR News, London.
Closing arguments are wrapping up in James Whitey Bulger's racketeering trial. The reputed Boston mob boss is accused of taking part in 19 murders, charges which he is pleaded not guilty. He is also charged with a number of other crimes. For more than 15 years, Bulger was among the most wanted
fugitives12 in the US until 2011 when he was captured.
The family of a tourist who was killed in a hit-and-run rampage on the crowded Venice Beach boardwalk over the weekend says she was robbed of her life. They issued a statement today on their loss of 32-year-old Alice Gruppioni, who was on her
honeymoon13 when a man
mowed14 down
pedestrians15 Saturday, injuring 11 people as well. That driver is now in police
custody16.
分享到: